Music From And Between Other Worlds

tumblr_mr9rgx8ipO1qd9dz2o1_500

Photo via last.fm. Mr. Ondar was a superstar in Tuva. He’s often known for his prominent role in the 1999 documentary “Genghis Blues” about throat singing. He collaborated with Frank Zappa, Willie Nelson, Bela Fleck, among many others.

Whenever you first heard his music, you can probably remember who introduced you, or where you were. It does not sound like any other natural sound, musical or otherwise.  Sometimes it does not sound natural. The interview we link to below is the finest he ever gave (that we know of) because Ralph Leighton lucidly and intelligently explains his own experience working with and producing an album for Mr. Ondar, whose music will live on:

The technique known as throat singing is an ancient style still practiced in Tuva, a small republic between Siberia and Mongolia’s Gobi desert. Traditionally, it was practiced by herders.

In 1995, Kongar-Ol Ondar won a U.N.-sponsored international festival of throat stinging, and was honored by his nation with the title People’s Throat Singer of Tuva. He performed around the world and collaborated with Ry CooderThe Chieftains, Mickey Hart, Willie Nelson, Randy Scruggs and others. He was also featured in the 1999 film Genghis Blues... Continue reading

Chingam

Photo credits : Ramesh Kidangoor

Photo credits : Ramesh Kidangoor

Chingam is the first month of the Malayalam calendar.  New Year’s Day 1189, or Chingam 1st,  fell on August 17, 2013  and marks the beginning of Chingamasam.  This auspicious day is welcomed by people of Kerala with special poojas and prayers.  In the early morning Hindus  in large numbers visit their nearby temples. The Onam festival is celebrated in this month. Continue reading

Cricket Is Critical

Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times. Juhu beach in Mumbai, India.

Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times. Juhu beach in Mumbai, India.

The abundant wildlife and traditional culture of India, especially Kerala and its neighboring states in the south, are our most common interests, both on this blog and within the lodging properties we develop and operate. Salim’s brief, daily posts are a mainstay of these interests. Selveraj’s frequent posts capture, in a single snapshot, the uniquely south Indian on-the-road experience.

What we offer less of, for good reason, is an attempt to capture “India” in small snapshots. The quotation marks denote that India is the name of a country, yes, but that it is realistically more the name of an idea; an ideal; any attempt to capture that in a single view or experience is futile because of the complex, diverse and dynamic components.

Continue reading

Sharing My Summer Travels

“The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.” -St. Augustine.

Over this past summer, I’ve had the extraordinary opportunity of traveling around the United States and abroad to see some various national parks. Traveling abroad–and especially, traveling to areas of natural beauty carved out by Earth–always serve as a humble reminder of how little we’ve seen and how important global conservation efforts are. I’d like to think that my summer’s travels to China and Hawaii have opened a little bit more of that book, and it’s with great pleasure that I share some of the pictures from the trip.

Continue reading

67th Independence Day Celebration – India

 India's National flag is a horizontal tri color of deep saffron at the top white in the middle and dark green at the bottom a blue wheei in the centre of the white

Photo credits: Ramesh Kidangoor 

India became an Independent nation on August 15, 1947 and celebrates Independence Day on that same date annually.  Flag hoisting ceremonies and cultural programmes take place in governmental and and non- governmental institutions throughout the country. Continue reading

If You Happen To Be In San Francisco

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

We have plenty of thoughts on Detroit’s current state of affairs, and an occasional post on one oddity or another connected to the city; but only one recent post, and a brief followup, with a direct reference to its cultural heritage. Thanks to Wired for bringing this exhibit to our attention:

…Many famous architects, such as Albert Kahn, helped the city become an architectural hub, and Jarmain’s title, American Beauty, is named after Kahn’s American Beauty Iron Building. Even though Detroit is shrinking and structures are being destroyed almost daily, it still has one of the country’s best collections of late 19th- and early 20th century buildings…

And thanks to the Meridian Gallery for this description of the upcoming exhibit in San Francisco: Continue reading

Monsoon Theyyam

Karkataka theyyam

Monsoon theyyam

The last month of the Malayalam calendar, Karkatakam (July 17 to August 16) falls towards the end of southwest monsoon and signals the arrival of the Monsoon Theyyam. Karkataka Theyyams are performed by boys under the age of 13. They visit houses and Temples to ward off diseases, hardships and evil spirits that may come during the rainy season. Continue reading

Eid ul-Fitr – Muslim Festival

Eid ul-Fitr is celebrated after the conclusion of Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting. Ramadan is always in the ninth month of the lunar year, so the date it falls in the calendar year varies. During this time Muslims abstain from eating and drinking throughout the day, and spend time in prayer to purify the body and soul. The onset of the festival is indicated by the sighting of the crescent Moon on the Western horizon. Ramadan is celebrated by Muslims all over the world. Continue reading

Bull Festival Karnataka

Photo credits: Ramesh Kidangoor

Photo credits: Ramesh Kidangoor

The Bull Worshiping Festival is celebrated by Indian farmers, mainly in the State of Karnataka. On this day farmers bathe their bulls, decorate them with ornaments and shawls, paint their horns, and place garlands of flowers around their necks. Continue reading

Suburbanosity

St. Andrews Manor, Shanghai, China (2009)

St. Andrews Manor, Shanghai, China (2009)

Thanks to Atlantic’s far-reaching reviewers and commentators for their attention to this book:

Swedish-born photographer Martin Adolfsson has been living in New York City since 2007, but he’s spent a lot of his time documenting upper middle-class suburban enclaves outside the U.S. Continue reading

Reconsidering Deaccession

DIA-II We understand and sympathize with Mr. Schjeldahl’s reconsideration of the implication of his earlier post, considering the volume of vitriol among the comments that followed it. But the core point of that post was lost in the reconsideration:

I take back my endorsement, in an earlier post, of the idea that the city of Detroit should ease its financial crisis by selling art works from the collection of the Detroit Institute of the Arts. I also apologize to the many whom my words pained. Continue reading

Urban Muse

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

It does not matter whether you are a farmer, a geneticist, or whatever you do with your time: you will almost certainly be affected in important, unexpected ways after time spent in Paris.   Continue reading

Ochirakkali – Temple Festival

Photo credits : Renjith

Photo credits: Renjith

Ochira, located in the Kollam district of Kerala, is famous for the Parabrahma Temple, dedicated to Lord Shiva. The Ochirakkali is a mock fight enacted between groups of men dressed as warriors on the battlefield, commemorating the historic battle fought between the Kayamkulam and Chempakasseri soldiers. Continue reading

Crossing the Border: From Kerala to Tamil Nadu

Grapes ready for harvest

The first thing that I noticed about Tamil Nadu was the juxtaposition to the Kerala landscape to which I am now accustomed. Unlike the mountainous western Kerala, where during monsoon rain is plentiful and direct sunlight a rarity, just across the border in Tamil Nadu the land is flat, and during monsoon the air is dry and the sun shining. It is a shockingly fast transition that you can see as soon as you are at the base of the mountains. I knew this part of Tamil Nadu was flat, but I thought it would all be made up of lush green farm land, but instead what I encountered resembled central Texas, dry and rocky. In fact, it made me feel quite at home.

After seeing the landscape it was not surprising to hear from a local organic farmer, that most of the water in Tamil Nadu comes from the Periyar River in Kerala via the Mullaperiyar Dam. The farm boasted many types of fruits, including grapes and pomegranates.  It was well worth the trip to see a farm in action and to see how and where some of the local fruits are grown.  Continue reading

Karkidakam – Ramayana Masam

Reciting Holy Book Ramayana

Reciting the Holy Book of Ramayana

Karkidakam is the last month in the Malayalam calendar, which this year falls between 17th July and 16th August on the Western calendar. Historically the southwest monsoon is bringing chilling torrential rain during this period. In Kerala every observant Hindu family recites the Holy Book of Ramayana in homes and temples during this time, making Karkidakam popularly known as Ramayana Masam. Continue reading

If You Happen To Want To Live in Felpham, West Sussex

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

We are not brokers, but in the spirit of entrepreneurial conservation, and a price tag so seemingly reasonable, we are obliged to bring this to your attention:

Guide Price Of £650,000 Continue reading

Mahabalipuram Shore Temple – Tamil Nadu

Photo credits: Ramesh Kidangoor

Photo credits: Ramesh Kidangoor

Completed in the latter half of the 8th century A.D, Mahabalipuram Shore Temple is one of the finest examples of structural temple architecture, meaning that it was built from granite block as opposed to being carved from solid stone. It belongs to a period when this temple construction style was at its peek. Continue reading

Chettinadu Mansions – Tamil Nadu

Photo credits : Ramesh Kidangoor

Photo credits : Ramesh Kidangoor

Chettinadu, loacated in the Sivagana district of southern Tamil Nadu, is the homeland of Nattukottai Chettiars (also known as “Nagarathars”), who are the highest class of the Chettiar Tamil community.  Nattukottai Chettiars, are often prosperous individuals in either the banking or business community.  Due to their rich cultural heritage such as their art, architecture, and antiques, their mansions are often a popular attraction for visitors. Continue reading

Sourcing Icelandic Wilderness

Þórsmörk. Glacier descending from Eyjafjallajökull. Collodion print by Frederick W. W. Howell ca 1900. Bequest of Daniel Willard Fiske; compilation by Halldór Hermannsson; Cornell University Library Rare & Manuscript Collections.

How Icelanders themselves saw the inner regions of their country, and the differences in perspective between the more and less educated segments of the population, can give valuable insight to the environmental practices of Iceland today, as well as portray the influence of European teaching on the more erudite Icelanders.

Although my focus is on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it will be useful for me to explore the roots of Icelandic and European thought on unused open land and Nature, especially since much of the rural Icelanders’ perceptions were tinted by folklore and legend. Therefore, at least a cursory background of Icelandic folklore as it relates to my research topic is necessary, so I will consult the multitude of translated Icelandic myths, folk stories, and sagas, as well as the vast literature on wilderness and Nature in European thought, that Cornell Library owns in its Icelandic collection. Continue reading

Communities Acting Collectively With Entrepreneurial Leadership

Screen Shot 2013-07-08 at 9.50.42 AM

Thanks to this interview podcast on Fresh Air, we learned about Ava DuVernay and through her we learned about @AFFRM (click the banner above to go to their site, and be sure to read her interview with Director Spike Lee). DuVernay is a cultural entrepreneur, par excellence, and we salute her sense of community and collaboration:

Before she started making movies a few years ago, DuVernay made a name for herself through her marketing and publicity firm DVA Media + Marketing, which has handled films by brand-name directors like Clint Eastwood and Steven Spielberg. Continue reading